(TRENTON) – The Assembly Education
Committee on Thursday approved legislation sponsored by Assembly Democrats
Patrick J. Diegnan, Jr. and Thomas P. Giblin that creates several measures to
ensure the health of student athletes, including making physical exams a
requirement under New Jersey law for students in grades six through 12 who want
to play school-sponsored sports.
“Playing
sports offer many benefits to young people, but for a student who suffers from
asthma, a heart condition or any other serious ailment, they can be dangerous,”
said Diegnan (D-Middlesex). “This bill puts in place several provisions to
ensure the safety of our young athletes. No student should step onto a field if
he or she has an illness that could be exacerbated by playing a
sport.”
“Sports
can be beneficial to your health, but they can also have the opposite effect if
you have a medical condition that can be aggravated by physical activity.
Contact sports especially are prone to injuries that can be made worse by
certain health conditions,” said Giblin (D-Essex). “This bill helps protect our
student athletes from serious injury by putting their safety and well-being
first.”
Current State Board of
Education regulations require school districts to ensure that students in grades
six to 12 have a physical examination prior to participation in school-sponsored
athletics, with the findings of the examination documented on a form approved by
the Commissioner of Education.
The bill
(A-3048) would make it a statutory requirement for public and nonpublic schools
to require students enrolled in grades six through 12 who want to play a
school-sponsored interscholastic or intramural sport to get a physical
examination before they can join the team or squad.
Under
the bill, schools would have to use the “Preparticipation Physical Evaluation”
form developed by the American Academy of Family Physicians, American Academy of
Pediatrics, American College of Sports Medicine, American Medical Society for
Sports Medicine, American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine and the
American Osteopathic Academy of Sports Medicine.
The
physical examination required under the bill must be conducted within 365 days
prior to the first day of official practice in an athletic season, and must be
conducted by a licensed physician, advanced practice nurse or physician
assistant. If the exam is conducted more than 90 days prior to the first day of
practice, the student would be required under the bill to also submit a health
history update questionnaire for review by the school nurse and, if applicable,
the school athletic trainer.
The bill
also directs the Commissioner of Education and the Commissioner of Health, in
consultation with the New Jersey Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics,
the New Jersey Academy of Family Physicians, the American Heart Association, and
the New Jersey Chapter of the American College of Cardiology to develop, by the
2013-2014 school year, a Student-Athlete Cardiac Screening professional
development module to increase the assessment skills of those health care
practitioners who perform student-athlete physical examinations and screenings.
Under
the bill, a physician, advanced practice nurse or physician assistant who
performs a student athlete’s annual physical examination prior to the student’s
participation in a school-sponsored sport must complete the Student-Athlete
Cardiac Screening professional development module. Upon performing a physical
examination, the physician, advanced practice nurse, or physician assistant must
sign the certification statement on the Preparticipation Physical Evaluation
form attesting to the completion of the training module. The signed
certification statement would be kept by the public school district’s board of
education, or the school’s governing board or chief school
administrator.
Lastly,
the commissioner of education, in consultation with the commissioner of health,
the American Heart Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics must
develop a pamphlet that provides information about sudden cardiac arrest to
student-athletes and the parents or guardians of student athletes. The bill
requires the commissioner to distribute the pamphlet to all school districts in
the state at no charge. Individual school districts must distribute the pamphlet
to student athletes and their parents or guardians starting in the 2013-2014
school year and each subsequent school year, as part of the student’s
preparticipation physical examination. Student athletes and their parents or
guardians must certify in writing that they received and reviewed the pamphlet.
Under
the bill, the pamphlet and the training module must be posted on the websites of
the Department of Education, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the New Jersey
Academy of Family Physicians, the American Heart Association, the American
College of Cardiology, the Athletic Trainers’ Society of New Jersey, the State
Board of Medical Examiners, the New Jersey State Board of Nursing, and the New
Jersey State Society of Physician Assistants.
The bill
was released by the Assembly Education Committee.
No comments:
Post a Comment